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MINUTES OF THE <br />ORONO PLANNING COMMISSION MEETING <br />Monday, June 18, 2018 <br />6:30 o'clock p.m. <br />6. LA18-000057 CITY OF ORONO, TEXT AMENDMENT — ACCESSORY STRUCTURES <br />SETBACK, 8:07 P.M. — 8:22 P.M. <br />Barnhart stated the proposed ordinance would clarify and restate the setbacks for accessory structures <br />throughout the City. The City has specific rules for accessory structures and buildings based on their size <br />and, in some cases, the size of the lot and whether it is a lakeshore lot and where on the property it is <br />located. These exceptions and regulations have evolved over time to the point where they are difficult to <br />understand and require extensive flowcharting to drill down to the applicable regulation. <br />Staff is proposing a wholesale rewrite of this section of the Code. Three primary goals have been <br />identified: <br />1. Ease of use. The user can find the applicable regulation using common logic. <br />2. Ease of understanding. The user can understand the regulation and how it applies to their <br />question. Reduce the number of exceptions. <br />Remove unnecessary regulation. In some cases regulations designed to address a singular <br />concern will be removed in the interest of Goals 1 and 2 above. <br />Barnhart stated another objective will be to reduce the number of exceptions. The draft ordinance will <br />include applicable definitions for accessory use or structure, building and structure, and oversized <br />accessory structures. <br />Staff proposes delineating the setbacks for accessory structures in a table format within each district along <br />with an example table for discussion purposes for the LR-lA zoning district. Sample zonal impacts <br />include a lake lot and a nonlake lot. Other zonal impacts to be taken into consideration are the lake yard, <br />the public area adjacent to a street, hardcover limits, and massing. <br />The orange on the map depicts the more immediate impact to the neighbors. Barnhart noted he did not <br />include potential setbacks because those would change based on the different zone. The blue area depicts <br />the building zone where the main principal structure and oversized accessory structures would be <br />appropriate. The green depicts the intermediate area where an oversized accessory structure might go. <br />Barnhart stated the proposal by Staff is to codify those areas for each individual zoning district using that <br />as the underlying philosophy. Barnhart noted there will still be some things that will be unique to each <br />lot. <br />Barnhart stated he would like to know if the Planning Commission feels there is a problem with the <br />zoning code as it relates to accessory structures and what they would like to see in the ordinance for it to <br />be successful to the users of the ordinance. <br />McCutcheon asked if Staff would like to have a diagram of what is possible instead of having a list of <br />setbacks. <br />Barnhart stated the diagram would be useful from a discussion standpoint but that in the actual code there <br />would be setback numbers. Barnhart stated the ordinance is very conceptual at this stage, and if the <br />Planning Commission thinks accessory structures are okay in the intermediate zone for whatever zoning <br />Page 19 of 21 <br />